Your thought at 31:58 is spot on. Case in point, when Juno is fighting one of the creatures at the end and it tackles her, she rolls it over, and, knowing she has it by the shoulders, she delivers two solid knees to his balls. She couldn't see, but she knew exactly what to do, and those knees turned the tide of her fight with it.
Yeah that was a genuine one lol. On a side note I always wonder why people scream when they get scared. For me it's always an inhale thing. Like, I gasp and sometimes loudly, but nothing ever gets projected outward. I wish I knew what the startled scream felt like so I could compare.
@@jackrussell1232 > why people scream when they get scared People are different and possess different strategies of dealing with fear, with each having its own advantages and drawbacks. It makes perfect sense why people (social animals as they are) would develop a loud "signal" reaction, so that other members of the group would be immediately aware of the danger.
I always feel bad for the characters that get hurt and then die right after the painful process of trying to patch it up. Like, if I was the girl with the broken leg and I knew I was just going to die in five minutes anyway I'd be like "Just... just leave the leg. Who brought a cigarette?" And then that's got to be weird for the people that were trying to give first aid too, right? I mean you'd know that you were just trying to help, but then you also have to know that you made someone's last moments more painful than they had to be. Good old horror movies: always making us picture ourselves in scenarios we'd never want to be in.
24:40 Animals go into caves for shelter and seeking food. BTW, this wasn't a real cave. It was a series of sets with removable walls so they could be put together to look like different cave sections, and so the camera could be set up at any angle.
I always thought this was a goofy movie. It's a soap opera in a cave! And you're absolutely correct Dasha, when you said "couldn't they wait until they get out of the cave to solve their issues.". Lol 😆
Hey, Dasha! Great selection! Not everybody gets this movie on the first pass. I first saw "The Descent" in a theater and have seen it many times since! It's one of my favorite recent horror movies. Originally, this film was a sensation on the festival circuit before shocking indie arthouse crowds! A lot of people miss the brief exchange of looks between Juno and Sara's hubby at the raft which Beth notices. The implication is that Juno is having an affair with Sara's husband! The atmospheric lighting, the claustrophobic setting and the character development are what make this film work so well. The unspoken mistrust between the girlfriends, Sara's psychological trauma and the survival drama of a cave-in in an unmapped subterranean environment all blend to create a layered screenplay that is fraught with tension even before the ghouls appear! The creature design is amazing. Their origin as a devolved offshoot of humanity is shrouded in mystery. The rules of the hunt are quickly established. The gore, saliva and excrement are beyond disgusting. Watching the ladies become as savage as their predators is a wicked delight! Sara, already fragile going in, snaps early on but it gives her lucidity and she adapts to the new rules quickly becoming like Col. Kurtz in "Apocalypse Now". Encountering and mercy-killing Beth gives her a mission: revenge. Juno is the best character. She is deeply flawed but well-meaning in her effort to make amends. She did cheat on her friend but had to grieve her lover's death in isolation. Her good-faith effort to reunite the gang with a grand adventure goes terribly awry because of her reckless choice to go off the beaten path without notifying local rangers. It's a fatal error in judgment to not put that decision to the group. Her murder of Beth is purely a horrific accident. Her abandonment of Beth is done out of shame, guilt and fear. Yet, Beth and Sara misinterpret the act as cold-blooded murder. I love the last image of her limping but defiant against impossible odds. The death of the girls' friendship is as painful as any of their violent demises. You see a female ghoul in the abbatoir/latrine lake! These critters obviously never heard you don't sh*t where you eat! Lol. I'm thrilled you saw the preferable alternate UK ending. Sara doesn't get out but goes completely mad! After leaving Juno, she takes a spill and the escape sequence plays out as in the US version. However, after being shocked by the Juno revenant, she recovers from her spill still trapped underground unwinding her limbs just like one of the ghouls and fully immersed in a delusion that reunites her with her daughter. The camera pulls back to reveal her staring at the empty space occupied by her daughter in her mind. She is on a ledge in a huge cavern filled with ear-splitting howls. Will she become the new Queen of the Ghouls or will she eventually fall prey to one of the shrieking beasts? That's left for you to decide. Director Neil Marshall previously did the werewolf movie "Dog Soldiers" and went on to direct "Doomsday", "Centurion", the comic-accurate "Hellboy" reboot and "The Reckoning" about 17th-century witch trials. He also helmed two major battle episodes on "Game of Thrones": The Battle of Blackwater Bay and The Siege of the Wall. Additionally, he directed the premieres of the incredible pirate show "Black Sails" and the time-travel show "Timeless".
Only thing is that they got all the caving aspects of the film completely wrong: Wrong clothing , wrong footwear, wrong lights, climbing gear instead of caving gear, terrible technique, didn't follow basic caving procedures, etc. My caving friends and I couldn't get over how they got EVERYTHING wrong. Seriously why didn't they speak to some actual cavers when making this? The whole things a joke. Imagine a film about firefighters and but the actors are wearing police uniforms and equipment by mistake. Or set in a hospital but the surgeons are using dentistry stuff. Or mixing up rugby and football. Or the army and navy. It was that bad, really dreadful.
There's actually two versions of this movie. One with a more upbeat ending and one with the downer ending you saw. One is American the other is the British version. No prizes for guessing which one is which 😅 Director Neil Marshall actually has another horror prior to this one called Dog Soldiers. Don't worry, it's definitely easier to watch than this movie!
@Jumpman67 I didn't know there was a sequel. Seems unnecessary and with how brutal this film is, a little overkill. Like a sequel to Schindler's List. "Schindler's List 2. This time, Schindler's Pissed"
Check out the movies The Descent Part 2(2009), As Above So Below(2014), Host(2020), Hostel(2005), The Hills Have Eyes(2006), The Strangers(2008), and You’re Next(2011).
As a caver I think it's one of the worst. Really, really bad.😐 They got absolutely everything wrong: The clothes they wore, the lights they used, their footwear, their equipment, their technique, procedures... Why didn't they speak to any real cavers first to get details like that right? It's not hard and wouldn't have cost anything. I suspect they used a climbing consultant who'd never been down a cave, not a caving one because it was all climbing and camping gear, NOT caving gear and they made a complete mess of every obstacle, doing everything wrong. That was the real horror show IMO! Even without the monsters those girls were an accident waiting to happen and would probably have killed themselves. All the wrong gear and no idea!😁
Dasha you should watch the 2nd one aka Decent part 2 which came out in 2009 I’ve heard people say that dying by suffocating is very painful. A stone to the head should be quick and as painless as possible
I've only ever been in a cave once, on a tour in Germany. Something I hadn't realized was how HUMID it is in there. My glasses were fogged up the entire time, I could barely see anything lol
I wouldn't say humid, but yes there's a lot of moisture in the air and the heat from your face on one side and the cold of the cave make glasses steam up. That's why I wear contacts when I go caving.
That actually gets the caving side mostly correct, unlike this film which is utter shite from a caver's point of view. What they're wearing, their lights, they're using climbing gear instead of caving gear, their technique, not using basic caving procedures... it's all bollocks. Plus the premise of the story in 'The Cave' is based on real events, although not the characters and their actions which are fictional.
Hello Dasha!😊 Yikes!😱 I was surprised to see you doing this one. You should get a lot of views for this film.😉 The creatures in the cave are called "Crawlers". They are cavemen that have evolved underground for thousands of years. There are two different endings. In the alternate ending she actually does escape, and it is not a dream. Great reactions to this scary underground film, Dasha!!!!🎬👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 Have a great week!😊
If there ever was a movie where I would NOT want to be the cameraman or an actor it is this and anything involving the ocean. Heeeeeeeeeeeeeeeell no! Nope nope nope nope
Actually it's a really fun hobby and pretty safe if you go with someone experienced. It's exceptionally rare for anyone to get stuck. I can only think of two times in the whole history of caving. In both cases they were in steep downward sloping passages with gravity is working against them. Normally you simply wriggle back out, easy - swearing helps a lot!😀 The biggest dangers in caving are from falls or getting trapped by floods, but unless you're exceptionally unlucky both of those are easily preventable if you follow standard safe caving practise and check the weather and guide book. Accidents are rare and usually down to people doing dumb things or not knowing what they're doing so preventable. e.g. Going down a cave known to be prone to flooding without checking the weather forecast🙄, not going with someone experienced, not following standard safety procedures. Fun fact: 50% of Cave Rescue's call outs are for hikers and 25% are animal rescues, mainly dogs, sheep and cows. Only 25% of call outs are caving related and most of those are simply overdue parties who missed their call out time because the trip took longer than they expected. Cave Rescue only actually end up going down a cave in 4% of their call outs! 😮 In reality caving is a pretty safe hobby. Things like horse riding and fishing have much higher accident rates per head. People think caving is much more dangerous than it really is. The main issue is in the rare event of an accident you're in an isolated place that's difficult to get out of and when it does happen the press leap on it and exaggerate stuff. Cave diving is another matter though, you really need to know what you're doing. N.B. For anyone who fancies giving caving a try I recommend going with someone experienced. e.g your local caving club and checking out the following link: newtocaving.com/
It was all a set, they didn't go into any real caves. Would probably have been safer if they had! This film is layered, did this actually happen? Or is it all Sarah hallucinating? I preferred the second option, but the sequel ruined that...
It's fun, like a natural assault course, climbing, crawling, jumping into pools, going down natural water slides, abseiling, etc. And you're exploring, going places where few people have ever been before. If you're lucky you might even be the first ever!😀 And some caves are beautiful, although for some reason you always have to go through the shitty bits first before you see those parts.🤔😁 The other reasons I go caving are that it gets me out of the city and into the countryside, I'm also with a big group of friends doing something we all love. Caving also has great camaraderie. You're completely cut off from the outside world in an alien environment, so you and the people you're with are reliant on each other and always looking out for each other. You become very close, very quickly. I can go caving with someone I've just met and by the end of the weekend I'll know them better than people I've worked with for years.
In my culture I'm not supposed to go into cave but I enjoy watching cave movies lol I also liked hearing about your experience with seeing light in the cave, nature is cool.
I can handle anything in a horror movie, but the claustrophobia and spelunking really gets to me and I feel like I can't breath. There was this guy that got stuck in a cave and couldn't get out because of the strange position he was in, and just looking at a drawing of that ruined my whole week. Stuff of nightmares.
@@GarrettJayChristian That's exactly it. He got his body in a weird shape and there was no place to go forward and he couldn't go back so just stuck there...forever.
@@Stevenroy-Professional-Liar With some more research, it was Nutty Putty Caves in a stretch called the Birth Canal, about an hour from my mom's house near Elberta, Utah. They are now sealed as the final resting place of John Edward Jones.
Funny thing: I've taken several seriously claustrophobic people caving and they all loved it and wanted to go again. The trick is to keep them too busy to think about it, so their fears don't have a chance to take hold. I make sure I'm always talking to them, explaining what they need to do, facts about how caves and their formations form, telling silly stories to make them laugh, singing, reassuring them if they need it, etc. And because they can see how calm and relaxed I am, that helps them stay relaxed too.
I didn't see you mention this but you may have. She left Juno because she was sleeping with her husband before he died. That's why she shows the necklace to her right before the end.
I don't get claustrophobia. My true test was crawling through a small highway culvert. It was about 75 yards until I got to the other side. I did get scared but I realized that I could breathe and it was cool.
It's actually a really fun hobby and not all that dangerous if you go with someone experienced and follow standard safe caving practice. Unlike the idiots in this film who had clearly never been caving before based on what they were wearing, their lights and the fact they used climbing gear instead of caving equipment. Doh!🙄 Quite frankly even without the monsters they were an accident waiting to happen - Wrong gear and no idea!😁 Horse riding and fishing are statistically far more dangerous with many more accidents per head. Cave diving is another matter and you really need to know what you doing.
Even though this is technically a movie still consider the events of this Film as a Main/Prime Example on why ya shouldn't go Cave Exploring/Hiking in a huge new Cave without a Survival Preparedness Bag/Pack/Rucksack (whether a Duffel Bag, Shoulder Sling Strap Bag/Pack/Rucksack or a Dual Strap Bag/Pack/Rucksack) Packed Up/Customly Filled Up with a wide array/variety of different Survival Preparedness Gear (Cell Phone/Radio Communications, Navigation, Binoculars, Carabiners (the Climbing kind/sort/type/variant), Ropes / Straps / Cords, Waterproof Equipment, Hydration System (Hydration Bladder &/or a couple Canteens), Lighting / Lamp(s) / Torch(s), Camping Furniture, Medical & Personal Hygiene all in 1 Kit, Firestarter / Warmth Kit, MRE (Meals Ready to Eat) & Camp Kitchen all in 1, Shelter (Tent) / Sleeping Gear, Knive(s) / MultiTool(s), 1 backup Medical Kit (Smaller - Regular Sized) & Various Others) in case events just like the 1 in this Film happens 2 y'all because otherwise if/when events just like in this Film happens y'all ain't going 2 last 4 very long little low get very far in the same cave!
This film gets all the caving stuff completely wrong. The writer had clearly never been down a cave or spoken to an actual caver. The clothes and footwear they're wearing is wrong, they're using climbing gear not caving gear, the lights are wrong (no caver uses a hand torch or flares), their technique is shit and needlessly dangerous, they don't follow standard safe caving procedure... Even without the monsters they were an accident waiting to happen.😐 Most of the stuff you listed isn't used in caving, except perhaps on a major expedition somewhere remote. We avoid camping and use caving huts (bunk rooms), with kitchens, drying rooms for wet gear, showers, common rooms, power to charge our lights, etc whenever possible. Oh and a handy pub! For some reason these are either next door to the caving hut, or a three mile walk down country lanes.😀 We put our equipment in heavy duty PVC tackle sacks designed for caving, rucksacks etc aren't tough enough, the straps will get caught up on stuff and it's a good way to ruin a decent ruck sack. Phones don't work underground and the damp and grit would kill them anyway, we leave them on the surface. We use SRT ropes not climbing ropes which are less stretchy and are tougher. I do take a survival bag, basic med kit, some water and granola bars, plus if there are any pitches either a ladder and life line for beginners, or an SRT* rope and kit for more challenging trips with experienced friends. * Single Rope Technique. An SRT kit is a caving harness (NOT a climbing one), hand jammer, foot jammer, cows tails, a D-ring, some krabs and a caving descender such as a rack or Petzl plummit - NOT a figure of 8 like they used in the film as you can't detach them from the rope if you need to, which could leave you hung up and basically buggered. As for navigation equipment we only use that to find a cave we've never been to before, or if surveying new passage where we use a compass, clinometer and tape measure. Or a laser if you can afford one. Compasses aren't much use for route finding in a cave system. Just go with someone who knows it. if it's really complex I'll look behind at a junction and make a mental note of how it looks coming back, or perhaps leave some sort of marker like a couple of stones piled up, etc, but it's very rare that's needed. Most of the time there a lots of little clues to the right way out even if you can't remember it. You just follow the stream way, go upwards, look for worn passages where others have been before, search for a draft and if you're close to the exit you can smell the fresh air. If you go the wrong way it's usually fairly obvious pretty quickly.
;btw: Cluster;phobia isn't a "fear of grapes" as most folks think it is, as it's a "fear of grapes...that aren't seperate: 'clustered'." 🫣🍇 (& eaten in small scary spaces!🤫;)
Your thought at 31:58 is spot on. Case in point, when Juno is fighting one of the creatures at the end and it tackles her, she rolls it over, and, knowing she has it by the shoulders, she delivers two solid knees to his balls. She couldn't see, but she knew exactly what to do, and those knees turned the tide of her fight with it.
21:43 "if it bleeds, we can kill it." hell yea Dasha. Channeling her inner Dutch.
Lol isn't she was from Russia 🧐
@NeyGeneral in the movie "Predator" the character, Dutch Schaefer says "If it bleeds, we can kill it."
@@zephyr2five ahh I see yeah I remember lol I didn't realize it W quote
20:40
Holy crap, Dasha, that scream was EPIC! 🤣🤣🤣
Yeah that was a genuine one lol. On a side note I always wonder why people scream when they get scared. For me it's always an inhale thing. Like, I gasp and sometimes loudly, but nothing ever gets projected outward. I wish I knew what the startled scream felt like so I could compare.
Flew back so violently 😂
@@jackrussell1232
> why people scream when they get scared
People are different and possess different strategies of dealing with fear, with each having its own advantages and drawbacks. It makes perfect sense why people (social animals as they are) would develop a loud "signal" reaction, so that other members of the group would be immediately aware of the danger.
@@Drazzz27 That makes sense to me, it's just the opposite reaction from the one I typically have so I can't key into it. It's always an inhale for me.
I watched someone spelunking tight caves as they recorded for VR so you can look around. That was the end of me watching spelunking in VR.
I always feel bad for the characters that get hurt and then die right after the painful process of trying to patch it up. Like, if I was the girl with the broken leg and I knew I was just going to die in five minutes anyway I'd be like "Just... just leave the leg. Who brought a cigarette?" And then that's got to be weird for the people that were trying to give first aid too, right? I mean you'd know that you were just trying to help, but then you also have to know that you made someone's last moments more painful than they had to be. Good old horror movies: always making us picture ourselves in scenarios we'd never want to be in.
Watching this IN Appalachia on a dark and stormy night 😌
Like a polar explorers who have a tradition of watching The Thing (1982).
@ИгорьСоколов-й8щ yes, quite. my office is as far as I'll go, though--can't see myself watching from within a cave, for instance.
Great reaction! This movie is pretty brutal. And deeper than just the average horror movie. No pun intended.
The title describes Sarah's mental state during the movie. Were there actually any monsters in that cave? Other than Sarah?
Nice reaction. I didn't know this movie at all, but it is surely something worth seeing.
OMG THAT JUMPSCARE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
LOL AT 20:40!
LOVE BETH'S PAJAMAS! IT WAS A CHRISTMAS PRESENT!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
OMG DASHA'S SCREAM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Considering your claustrophobia terrific job surviving this movie. Keep up the great work Dasha!
24:40 Animals go into caves for shelter and seeking food.
BTW, this wasn't a real cave. It was a series of sets with removable walls so they could be put together to look like different cave sections, and so the camera could be set up at any angle.
I always thought this was a goofy movie. It's a soap opera in a cave! And you're absolutely correct Dasha, when you said "couldn't they wait until they get out of the cave to solve their issues.". Lol 😆
Hey, Dasha! Great selection! Not everybody gets this movie on the first pass.
I first saw "The Descent" in a theater and have seen it many times since! It's one of my favorite recent horror movies.
Originally, this film was a sensation on the festival circuit before shocking indie arthouse crowds!
A lot of people miss the brief exchange of looks between Juno and Sara's hubby at the raft which Beth notices. The implication is that Juno is having an affair with Sara's husband!
The atmospheric lighting, the claustrophobic setting and the character development are what make this film work so well.
The unspoken mistrust between the girlfriends, Sara's psychological trauma and the survival drama of a cave-in in an unmapped subterranean environment all blend to create a layered screenplay that is fraught with tension even before the ghouls appear!
The creature design is amazing. Their origin as a devolved offshoot of humanity is shrouded in mystery. The rules of the hunt are quickly established. The gore, saliva and excrement are beyond disgusting. Watching the ladies become as savage as their predators is a wicked delight!
Sara, already fragile going in, snaps early on but it gives her lucidity and she adapts to the new rules quickly becoming like Col. Kurtz in "Apocalypse Now". Encountering and mercy-killing Beth gives her a mission: revenge.
Juno is the best character. She is deeply flawed but well-meaning in her effort to make amends. She did cheat on her friend but had to grieve her lover's death in isolation. Her good-faith effort to reunite the gang with a grand adventure goes terribly awry because of her reckless choice to go off the beaten path without notifying local rangers. It's a fatal error in judgment to not put that decision to the group. Her murder of Beth is purely a horrific accident. Her abandonment of Beth is done out of shame, guilt and fear. Yet, Beth and Sara misinterpret the act as cold-blooded murder. I love the last image of her limping but defiant against impossible odds.
The death of the girls' friendship is as painful as any of their violent demises.
You see a female ghoul in the abbatoir/latrine lake! These critters obviously never heard you don't sh*t where you eat! Lol.
I'm thrilled you saw the preferable alternate UK ending. Sara doesn't get out but goes completely mad! After leaving Juno, she takes a spill and the escape sequence plays out as in the US version. However, after being shocked by the Juno revenant, she recovers from her spill still trapped underground unwinding her limbs just like one of the ghouls and fully immersed in a delusion that reunites her with her daughter. The camera pulls back to reveal her staring at the empty space occupied by her daughter in her mind. She is on a ledge in a huge cavern filled with ear-splitting howls. Will she become the new Queen of the Ghouls or will she eventually fall prey to one of the shrieking beasts? That's left for you to decide.
Director Neil Marshall previously did the werewolf movie "Dog Soldiers" and went on to direct "Doomsday", "Centurion", the comic-accurate "Hellboy" reboot and "The Reckoning" about 17th-century witch trials. He also helmed two major battle episodes on "Game of Thrones": The Battle of Blackwater Bay and The Siege of the Wall. Additionally, he directed the premieres of the incredible pirate show "Black Sails" and the time-travel show "Timeless".
Only thing is that they got all the caving aspects of the film completely wrong:
Wrong clothing , wrong footwear, wrong lights, climbing gear instead of caving gear, terrible technique, didn't follow basic caving procedures, etc. My caving friends and I couldn't get over how they got EVERYTHING wrong.
Seriously why didn't they speak to some actual cavers when making this? The whole things a joke.
Imagine a film about firefighters and but the actors are wearing police uniforms and equipment by mistake. Or set in a hospital but the surgeons are using dentistry stuff. Or mixing up rugby and football. Or the army and navy. It was that bad, really dreadful.
There's actually two versions of this movie. One with a more upbeat ending and one with the downer ending you saw.
One is American the other is the British version. No prizes for guessing which one is which 😅
Director Neil Marshall actually has another horror prior to this one called Dog Soldiers. Don't worry, it's definitely easier to watch than this movie!
The American version is the only one that makes sense with the sequel.
@Jumpman67 I didn't know there was a sequel. Seems unnecessary and with how brutal this film is, a little overkill.
Like a sequel to Schindler's List.
"Schindler's List 2. This time, Schindler's Pissed"
REMEMBER WATCHING THIS RANDOM OFF TV ITS ALWAYS A BANGER TO WATCH
19:09 "It's Gollum. He's been following us for three days"
I see Gollum has found an inter dimensional portal in Mount Doom
Check out the movies The Descent Part 2(2009), As Above So Below(2014), Host(2020), Hostel(2005), The Hills Have Eyes(2006), The Strangers(2008), and You’re Next(2011).
Part 2 is a waste of time.
Dasha is the most intelligent reactor on TH-cam. She gets and catches everything!
I agree
It’s about a lot more than just being in “close, tight, small spaces”😊. You’re in for a surprise.
Good jumpscare there lol
you think this is claustrophobic
try watching Buried (2010)
with Ryan Reynolds
love your reactions 💚
😂😂😂 that was a good reaction ahahahahaha 😅 oh man, she's funny
Dashareacts notification, I click 🥰
One of the best horror movies ever IMO. I'm glad you watched the original ending.
As a caver I think it's one of the worst. Really, really bad.😐
They got absolutely everything wrong: The clothes they wore, the lights they used, their footwear, their equipment, their technique, procedures... Why didn't they speak to any real cavers first to get details like that right? It's not hard and wouldn't have cost anything.
I suspect they used a climbing consultant who'd never been down a cave, not a caving one because it was all climbing and camping gear, NOT caving gear and they made a complete mess of every obstacle, doing everything wrong. That was the real horror show IMO! Even without the monsters those girls were an accident waiting to happen and would probably have killed themselves. All the wrong gear and no idea!😁
10:14 "Julia's so nice, I really like her. We'll see if my opinion change, but right now..." 😬
Ayyyyy, Lebowski! Love your content, too!
@@blueroninstudiosthanks!
Juno*
I loved this movie when I was younger! Had it on dvd.
"Had?" Where'd it go?
@Corn_Pone_Flicks either pawned or sold at a garage sale
Dasha you should watch the 2nd one aka Decent part 2 which came out in 2009
I’ve heard people say that dying by suffocating is very painful. A stone to the head should be quick and as painless as possible
Nice pics from all your videos,
Love your reacts, you really so sensitive
I've only ever been in a cave once, on a tour in Germany. Something I hadn't realized was how HUMID it is in there. My glasses were fogged up the entire time, I could barely see anything lol
I wouldn't say humid, but yes there's a lot of moisture in the air and the heat from your face on one side and the cold of the cave make glasses steam up. That's why I wear contacts when I go caving.
Ah Dasha, you're so freaking adorable. Awesome reaction.
Bravo.
wish more had settings like this easy on eyes , you have a dark background.
I believe there is someone under your couch staring at you.
Great horror movie! I'm staying out of caves from now on! Great reaction and Thanks Dasha!❤️💛
Oh Dasha lol….. there is NO GOOD TIME …… to watch this movie. The claustrophobia is real. Even if you watch it in a wide open field lol
I hope Dasha is watching the UK version 😃
There is an alternate ending where she does escape. The second one tells you they went with that ending.
You should watch The Cave
That actually gets the caving side mostly correct, unlike this film which is utter shite from a caver's point of view. What they're wearing, their lights, they're using climbing gear instead of caving gear, their technique, not using basic caving procedures... it's all bollocks.
Plus the premise of the story in 'The Cave' is based on real events, although not the characters and their actions which are fictional.
Spat out me dinner when Dasha said "shite" LOL
There are alternate endings, i prefer this one.
❤
Please react to the descent part 2
3:21 yep, real friends lol
The lesson is to never venture into caves lol
There's an alternate ending where Sarah lives. They made the sequel pick right where that ending leaves off.
😊😊❤😊😊😊great review dasha
LMFAO great horror film, i came here only for the big jump scare reveal cuz i knew it was gunna get Dasha
Hello Dasha!😊 Yikes!😱 I was surprised to see you doing this one. You should get a lot of views for this film.😉 The creatures in the cave are called "Crawlers". They are cavemen that have evolved underground for thousands of years. There are two different endings. In the alternate ending she actually does escape, and it is not a dream. Great reactions to this scary underground film, Dasha!!!!🎬👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 Have a great week!😊
Great reaction. Very well done, young lady.
Gollum: The movie.
If there ever was a movie where I would NOT want to be the cameraman or an actor it is this and anything involving the ocean. Heeeeeeeeeeeeeeeell no! Nope nope nope nope
It was a set in a studio.
20:39 👻 nice. love the shakey cam effect.
The people who do this for real are insane... and the people who die underground stuck... poor them but they kind of asked for it.
Actually it's a really fun hobby and pretty safe if you go with someone experienced.
It's exceptionally rare for anyone to get stuck. I can only think of two times in the whole history of caving. In both cases they were in steep downward sloping passages with gravity is working against them. Normally you simply wriggle back out, easy - swearing helps a lot!😀
The biggest dangers in caving are from falls or getting trapped by floods, but unless you're exceptionally unlucky both of those are easily preventable if you follow standard safe caving practise and check the weather and guide book.
Accidents are rare and usually down to people doing dumb things or not knowing what they're doing so preventable. e.g. Going down a cave known to be prone to flooding without checking the weather forecast🙄, not going with someone experienced, not following standard safety procedures.
Fun fact: 50% of Cave Rescue's call outs are for hikers and 25% are animal rescues, mainly dogs, sheep and cows. Only 25% of call outs are caving related and most of those are simply overdue parties who missed their call out time because the trip took longer than they expected. Cave Rescue only actually end up going down a cave in 4% of their call outs! 😮
In reality caving is a pretty safe hobby. Things like horse riding and fishing have much higher accident rates per head. People think caving is much more dangerous than it really is. The main issue is in the rare event of an accident you're in an isolated place that's difficult to get out of and when it does happen the press leap on it and exaggerate stuff.
Cave diving is another matter though, you really need to know what you're doing.
N.B. For anyone who fancies giving caving a try I recommend going with someone experienced. e.g your local caving club and checking out the following link:
newtocaving.com/
It was all a set, they didn't go into any real caves. Would probably have been safer if they had!
This film is layered, did this actually happen? Or is it all Sarah hallucinating?
I preferred the second option, but the sequel ruined that...
We call it potholing in the UK, people are crazy crawling through tight caves. What is the point?
It's fun, like a natural assault course, climbing, crawling, jumping into pools, going down natural water slides, abseiling, etc. And you're exploring, going places where few people have ever been before. If you're lucky you might even be the first ever!😀
And some caves are beautiful, although for some reason you always have to go through the shitty bits first before you see those parts.🤔😁
The other reasons I go caving are that it gets me out of the city and into the countryside, I'm also with a big group of friends doing something we all love.
Caving also has great camaraderie. You're completely cut off from the outside world in an alien environment, so you and the people you're with are reliant on each other and always looking out for each other. You become very close, very quickly. I can go caving with someone I've just met and by the end of the weekend I'll know them better than people I've worked with for years.
@speleokeir well explained
This was an alternate ending to the one im familiar with. There's another version.
I love listening to your voice. I’m not Russian, so I really don’t know half of what you say, but I enjoy your videos.
How do you not know half of what she says? She’s literally speaking English..
In my culture I'm not supposed to go into cave but I enjoy watching cave movies lol I also liked hearing about your experience with seeing light in the cave, nature is cool.
Happy your survived this movie
20:04 It could be Gollum.
put me down for NO CAVES! 😣 enjoyed your reaction 👍☺
The rare movie where the monsters are really not that scary compared to what else is going on.
I can handle anything in a horror movie, but the claustrophobia and spelunking really gets to me and I feel like I can't breath. There was this guy that got stuck in a cave and couldn't get out because of the strange position he was in, and just looking at a drawing of that ruined my whole week. Stuff of nightmares.
I remember that. It's near where I used to live. They couldn't even recover his body. He's still down there...
@@GarrettJayChristian That's exactly it. He got his body in a weird shape and there was no place to go forward and he couldn't go back so just stuck there...forever.
@@Stevenroy-Professional-Liar With some more research, it was Nutty Putty Caves in a stretch called the Birth Canal, about an hour from my mom's house near Elberta, Utah. They are now sealed as the final resting place of John Edward Jones.
Took me 3 hours to watch this because of my claustrophobia.
Funny thing: I've taken several seriously claustrophobic people caving and they all loved it and wanted to go again.
The trick is to keep them too busy to think about it, so their fears don't have a chance to take hold. I make sure I'm always talking to them, explaining what they need to do, facts about how caves and their formations form, telling silly stories to make them laugh, singing, reassuring them if they need it, etc. And because they can see how calm and relaxed I am, that helps them stay relaxed too.
I didn't see you mention this but you may have. She left Juno because she was sleeping with her husband before he died. That's why she shows the necklace to her right before the end.
Either she dreamt that she got out, or she dozed off in the car and is now dreaming that she is back in the cave.🤔
18:05 "Oh my god there is a bone!"
Dasha 🍒
Now watch part 2... 😁
Don't worry Dasha I'll protect you from the evil monsters an the tiny cave entrances 😎💪
I don't get claustrophobia. My true test was crawling through a small highway culvert. It was about 75 yards until I got to the other side. I did get scared but I realized that I could breathe and it was cool.
Cave exploring is something I don't ever want to do.
It's actually a really fun hobby and not all that dangerous if you go with someone experienced and follow standard safe caving practice.
Unlike the idiots in this film who had clearly never been caving before based on what they were wearing, their lights and the fact they used climbing gear instead of caving equipment. Doh!🙄 Quite frankly even without the monsters they were an accident waiting to happen - Wrong gear and no idea!😁
Horse riding and fishing are statistically far more dangerous with many more accidents per head.
Cave diving is another matter and you really need to know what you doing.
Yay
👍
Next react: Dawn of dead (2004) , please 😁 great movie 👏🏻👏🏻
Dasha we need a comeback of your blonde hair please like if you agree
I prefer this look myself
The creatures are called troglodytes.
still think this is the scariest movie out there.
The Next: Descent 2
On A lighter note, have you seen "While You Were Sleeping"?
Even though this is technically a movie still consider the events of this Film as a Main/Prime Example on why ya shouldn't go Cave Exploring/Hiking in a huge new Cave without a Survival Preparedness Bag/Pack/Rucksack (whether a Duffel Bag, Shoulder Sling Strap Bag/Pack/Rucksack or a Dual Strap Bag/Pack/Rucksack) Packed Up/Customly Filled Up with a wide array/variety of different Survival Preparedness Gear (Cell Phone/Radio Communications, Navigation, Binoculars, Carabiners (the Climbing kind/sort/type/variant), Ropes / Straps / Cords, Waterproof Equipment, Hydration System (Hydration Bladder &/or a couple Canteens),
Lighting / Lamp(s) / Torch(s), Camping Furniture, Medical & Personal Hygiene all in 1 Kit, Firestarter / Warmth Kit, MRE (Meals Ready to Eat) & Camp Kitchen all in 1, Shelter (Tent) / Sleeping Gear, Knive(s) / MultiTool(s), 1 backup Medical Kit (Smaller - Regular Sized) & Various Others) in case events just like the 1 in this Film happens 2 y'all because otherwise if/when events just like in this Film happens y'all ain't going 2 last 4 very long little low get very far in the same cave!
This film gets all the caving stuff completely wrong. The writer had clearly never been down a cave or spoken to an actual caver.
The clothes and footwear they're wearing is wrong, they're using climbing gear not caving gear, the lights are wrong (no caver uses a hand torch or flares), their technique is shit and needlessly dangerous, they don't follow standard safe caving procedure... Even without the monsters they were an accident waiting to happen.😐
Most of the stuff you listed isn't used in caving, except perhaps on a major expedition somewhere remote. We avoid camping and use caving huts (bunk rooms), with kitchens, drying rooms for wet gear, showers, common rooms, power to charge our lights, etc whenever possible. Oh and a handy pub! For some reason these are either next door to the caving hut, or a three mile walk down country lanes.😀
We put our equipment in heavy duty PVC tackle sacks designed for caving, rucksacks etc aren't tough enough, the straps will get caught up on stuff and it's a good way to ruin a decent ruck sack.
Phones don't work underground and the damp and grit would kill them anyway, we leave them on the surface. We use SRT ropes not climbing ropes which are less stretchy and are tougher.
I do take a survival bag, basic med kit, some water and granola bars, plus if there are any pitches either a ladder and life line for beginners, or an SRT* rope and kit for more challenging trips with experienced friends.
* Single Rope Technique. An SRT kit is a caving harness (NOT a climbing one), hand jammer, foot jammer, cows tails, a D-ring, some krabs and a caving descender such as a rack or Petzl plummit - NOT a figure of 8 like they used in the film as you can't detach them from the rope if you need to, which could leave you hung up and basically buggered.
As for navigation equipment we only use that to find a cave we've never been to before, or if surveying new passage where we use a compass, clinometer and tape measure. Or a laser if you can afford one. Compasses aren't much use for route finding in a cave system. Just go with someone who knows it. if it's really complex I'll look behind at a junction and make a mental note of how it looks coming back, or perhaps leave some sort of marker like a couple of stones piled up, etc, but it's very rare that's needed.
Most of the time there a lots of little clues to the right way out even if you can't remember it. You just follow the stream way, go upwards, look for worn passages where others have been before, search for a draft and if you're close to the exit you can smell the fresh air. If you go the wrong way it's usually fairly obvious pretty quickly.
Lets go, you watch scary movie, I watch scary movie 🤗
😴😳😱morning
This is why cave exploring is never going on our bucket list
Please dasha where's you're sweet sister😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭😭❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
She'll be back, have patience.
This is an excellent horror movie....but brilliant filmmaking
How’s the war going for you? Lol
Her friend was cheating with her ex husband. I'm surprised she didn't pick that up.
;btw: Cluster;phobia isn't a "fear of grapes" as most folks think it is, as it's a "fear of grapes...that aren't seperate: 'clustered'."
🫣🍇 (& eaten in small scary spaces!🤫;)
Fear of Memberberries?
This is why cave exploring is never going on our bucket list